Also of note:- Lee Marvin was nominated for a Golden Globe in the Best Motion Picture Actor - Musical/Comedy category for his role in "Paint Your Wagon" (1969). Marvin's character was a prospector who married a Latter-day Saint woman (lead actress Jean Seberg), but his character was not LDS.
- Actress Marisol Nichols received an ALMA Award (American Latino Media Arts Awards) nomination in the Outstanding Actor/Actress in a Made for Television Movie or Miniseries category for her portrayal of Meriam Al-Khalifa, a real-life Muslim princess who married a Latter-day Saint marine in the NBC TV movie "The Princess and the Marine" (2001).

Additional Notes About Award-Winning and Award-Nominated Latter-day Saint Roles:- The events portrayed in "Heavenly Creatures" take place while Juliet Hulme was a teenager, before she was baptized and became a devout Latter-day Saint (and best-selling novelist) as an adult.
- Although he was a Latter-day Saint, Butch Cassidy was not an active churchgoer during his adulthood, which is the time period portrayed in "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid."
- It is not entirely clear whether or not "Dean Trumbell" (Philip Seymour Hoffman's character in "Punch-Drunk Love") is a Latter-day Saint. The character lives in Provo, Utah, where over 90% of the population is LDS, and the Trumbell's employees (the Stevens brothers and their sister) have been explicitly identified as Mormons by the director. But the religious affiliation of Trumbell himself is uncertain.
- In the original novel by Roger Zelazny, a number of clues indicate that the main character "Tanner" is intended by the writer to be an ethnic Mormon. In a major scene in the novel, Tanner actually visits Latter-day Saints in Utah, including the President of the Church. Nothing in the movie version identifies Tanner as a Latter-day Saint.